دانلود کتاب The Gentle Civilizer of Nations: The Rise and Fall of International Law 1870-1960 (Hersch Lauterpacht Memorial Lectures)
by Thomas M. Franck
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عنوان فارسی: آرام Civilizer ملل: ظهور و سقوط از حقوق بین الملل 1870-1960 (هرش Lauterpacht یادبود سخنرانی) |
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The qualification 'so far, so good', is that the underlying philosophy dictates the structure of his argument, which opens the door to more questions than it answers. First, there is a Victorian element to the book (even suggested in the title, with its 'rise and fall' and the analogy of 'gentle' to feminine 'traditional' virtues that are embodied by a tradition of 'fathers and grandfathers') that reoccurs as an underlying motif, which raises suspicions about the 'openness' of IL's language. Second, despite trying to get away from the 'national' stories approach undertaken by authors such as Grewe, Koskenniemi falls into narrative trap of finding within IL various almost 'organic' national spirits that make up a Hegelian spirit that animates the discipline. Third, the underlying philosophical idea, reduced to a very crude sentence is: International Law absolutely fails, but it is its very failure that is a testament to its ideas, because we only can understand its failure via the very standards it erects, so that the ideas are always unreachable, but that is what reminds us that we are never quite there, and so we shoudl always be aware of our limitations. Right off the bat, there is a distinctly St. Pauline feel to this argument via the law (e.g., the law teaches us that we sinned, and though we cannot live up to the law, it sets the standard to internalize) - which is fine, but we might question whether we want to sign up to a new universal Christianization of the globe via law (e.g., in the tradition of colonialism and the crusades, and now as secular liberalism). But more importantly, this sort of argument evades the possibility that the very principoles or terms are themselves structurally encoded, or the way these terms solicit a set of social/political conditions, that thereby predestine their failure and obscure the opportunities to re-imagine the options/possibilities open to us. There is a subtle Kantianism in the work, which begs the question, in other words, what are those forced choices that hold IL together in its best moments, and could we begin to imagine a world that could transcend those forced choices?
An amazing book, it captures the contemporary spirit of late 20th-early 21st century Left-Liberalism, stands at the forefront of IL more generally as a work of profound philosophical, historical, intellectual, and artistic merit - and, it is without doubt, a must read for anyone interested in International Law.